You know, there's no one perfect process. Somewhere, something has to be traded in pursuit of a goal. And this is especially true when the subject is wine stability. There are lots of ways to achieve it (or to decide that one doesn't care), but every one of them means that something that's important or crucial to another winemaker or wine drinker must be abandoned. You can be sure that, for every technique (or lack thereof) in the stabilization portfolio, there's someone who thinks it's fundamentally deformative.